The national fabric : fashion, Britishness, globalization

Bibliographic Information

The national fabric : fashion, Britishness, globalization

Alison L. Goodrum

(Dress, body, culture)

Berg, 2005

  • : pbk
  • : cloth

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 215-235) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: cloth ISBN 9781845201869

Description

British fashion is characterized by oppositions: punk versus pageantry, anarchy versus monarchy, Cool Britannia versus Rule Britannia. Why has British fashion come to be so contradictory? How are these contradictions employed to 'sell British'? What do they mean for consumers who 'buy British'? Through an examination of iconic fashion companies Paul Smith and Mulberry, The National Fabric provides telling insights into the culture of contemporary fashion and the dilemmas of 'going global'. Goodrum argues that 'Britishness' is characterized less through a particular look than through its ambiguities. She shows how the apparently straightforward and economically-driven process of globalizing British fashion is, in fact, far more culturally nuanced and locally embedded than has previously been suggested. In examining the interplay between fashion and Britishness, Goodrum redresses a longstanding omission in fashion theory, which has been preoccupied with class, gender and race rather than with national identity.

Table of Contents

All Change Aboard the Fashion Express! Beyond the Big Hair: Geographies of Consumption, Globalization and Fashion A State of Disunion: Britishness and British Fashion Rising Sun, Setting Trends: Exporting British Fashion Chic Versus Geek: Locating Nation, Locating Taste Who Wears the Trousers? Fashion, Nation, Gender
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9781845201876

Description

British fashion is characterized by oppositions: punk versus pageantry, anarchy versus monarchy, Cool Britannia versus Rule Britannia. Why has British fashion come to be so contradictory? How are these contradictions employed to 'sell British'? What do they mean for consumers who 'buy British'? Through an examination of iconic fashion companies Paul Smith and Mulberry, The National Fabric provides telling insights into the culture of contemporary fashion and the dilemmas of 'going global'. Goodrum argues that 'Britishness' is characterized less through a particular look than through its ambiguities. She shows how the apparently straightforward and economically-driven process of globalizing British fashion is, in fact, far more culturally nuanced and locally embedded than has previously been suggested. In examining the interplay between fashion and Britishness, Goodrum redresses a longstanding omission in fashion theory, which has been preoccupied with class, gender and race rather than with national identity.

Table of Contents

All Change Aboard the Fashion Express! Beyond the Big Hair: Geographies of Consumption, Globalization and Fashion A State of Disunion: Britishness and British Fashion Rising Sun, Setting Trends: Exporting British Fashion Chic Versus Geek: Locating Nation, Locating Taste Who Wears the Trousers? Fashion, Nation, Gender

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